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Showing posts with label Dawn Kurtagich. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dawn Kurtagich. Show all posts

Friday, September 16, 2016

And the Trees Crept In by Dawn Kurtagich

For Silla and Nori, the stories about their mother's childhood home have always been just that: stories. Fairy tales almost. But Silla, planning ahead, managed once to get her mother to share a map. A map that would take her and Nori to their salvation one desperate evening. 

The manor may be crumbling, but it lives up to Silla's hopes. At least for a little while. Their aunt welcomes them and coddles them, but warns them ominously that they must stay out of the woods. As time passes, though, Silla's aunt disappears into the attic of the old home, leaving the girls to fend for themselves. And Silla notices that the woods have begun to grow ever so closer to the house.  

I turned the final page of Dawn Kurtagich's latest with more than a little bit of that what-the-heck-did-I-just-read feeling. It's an odd one, to be sure. And part of the oddness of it made it somewhat easy for me to figure out what was going on. 

And the Trees Crept In is a weird one. Anyone who read The Dead House might have some idea, but I'm not sure anything can truly prepare you for this one. And I have a feeling that folks are going to either love it or hate it. 

I kind of loved the oddities of this book. Yes, I figured out the twist, but the journey to finding out I was right was deliciously fun. And there's a method to Kurtagich's madness, if you take the time to pay attention :)

I have to be careful here because I don't want to spoil anything, but this is definitely the kind of book that will have you either rereading to find what you missed, or (as I did) flipping back and forth once you figure it out. 

I will say this, Dawn Kurtagich has once again surprised me and provided an excellent (and creepy) escape from mundane reality. And oh, that reality remains mundane! It makes reading stuff like this so much more fun. 

Rating: 4/5

Wednesday, September 16, 2015

The Dead House by Dawn Kurtagich

On February 2, 2005 Elmbridge High School was the scene of a tragic accident. A fire swept through the boarding school leaving three dead, many more injured, and one student listed as missing. 

It's this missing student, Kaitlyn Johnson - who was never even registered as a student at Elmbridge -, who is suspected of being the person behind the fire. Kaitlyn's story is one that has captivated people in the over two decades since that horrible day and speculation has become urban legend. But now evidence of Kaitlyn's existence has finally been found. 

Carly and Kaitlyn were always together. Carly got the day and Kaitlyn got the night. Their parents knew, their sister knew, but they were told never to let anyone outside of the family find out. When their parents were killed in an accident, though, Carly/Kaitlyn found themselves institutionalized at the Claydon Mental Hospital. Deemed to be on the upswing and not a danger to herself or others, "Carly" was allowed to attend Elmbridge during the school year. But during her final year at the school things started to get undeniably out of hand.

Dawn Kurtagich's debut is quite different. The reader never really gets a full explanation as to what's going on either with Carly/Kaitlyn or the fire. This is because the book is laid out as recovered diary entries, emails, IMs, and video recordings from their final year at the school.

Carly and Kaitlyn are deemed by their doctor to be a unique case of DID - dissociative identity disorder. Their doctor believes, in spite of what Carly and Kaitlyn tell the reader through their journals, that Kaitlyn manifested after the accident that killed Carly's parents. Indeed, the obvious implication that their younger sister knows about both personalities (if our narrators' journals can be trusted that is) does support the idea that both of them have been present their whole lives.

Notice I said if our narrators can be trusted. That's kind of key and it makes The Dead House a deliciously mind bending read! The way the story is presented gives the reader much to mull over. It's clear the police believe Kaitlyn set the fire and killed those students. The story that plays out via the journals could be taken that way or not, depending on where your sympathies lie. You could, for example, follow Naida's beliefs about the situation, or you might subscribe to Dr. Lansing's theory.

Either way, the story is limited and left up to your own imaginings to a certain extent, which means that each reader can come away with something different from the experience.

Personally, I'm not one to brush the fact that the school continues to claim victims well beyond Kaitlyn's time there under the rug. Just sayin'!

Rating: 4/5